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Mentoring for newly appointed consultant psychiatrists

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

G. Roberts
Affiliation:
North Devon District Hospital, Barnstaple
B. Moore
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Kingshill House, Kingshill Road, Swindon, Wiltshire SN1 4LG
C. Coles
Affiliation:
Wessex and South West Postgraduate Medical and Dental Deaneries
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Extract

The south-west Mentoring Scheme has developed in the context of a general and increasing concern for the health and morale of senior doctors (British Medical Association (BMA), 2000). Their problems are now well described (Allen, 1999; Ghodse et al, 2000), but there is little evidence of effective intervention. The aspirations of the National Service Framework and the NHS Plan will come to nothing if there are not sufficient trained and experienced staff to implement them, and senior staff are increasingly looking forward to early retirement rather than the continued satisfactions of working within the NHS. Recruitment and retention of consultant psychiatrists is the most problematic of all medical specialities, with 14% of posts empty or occupied by locums (Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health, 2000). There is a clear need to find ways of preventing work-related ill health, stress and burn-out among practitioners (Roberts, 1997; Department of Health, 1999: p 115), and to sustain their creative and productive engagement in health care. A demotivated profession cannot be expected to deliver an effective service (McBride & Metcalf, 1995; Appleton et al, 1998) and policy is not a substitute for personnel.

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Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2002

The south-west Mentoring Scheme has developed in the context of a general and increasing concern for the health and morale of senior doctors (British Medical Association (BMA), 2000). Their problems are now well described (Reference AllenAllen, 1999; Reference Ghodse, Mann and JohnsonGhodse et al, 2000), but there is little evidence of effective intervention. The aspirations of the National Service Framework and the NHS Plan will come to nothing if there are not sufficient trained and experienced staff to implement them, and senior staff are increasingly looking forward to early retirement rather than the continued satisfactions of working within the NHS. Recruitment and retention of consultant psychiatrists is the most problematic of all medical specialities, with 14% of posts empty or occupied by locums (Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health, 2000). There is a clear need to find ways of preventing work-related ill health, stress and burn-out among practitioners (Reference RobertsRoberts, 1997; Department of Health, 1999: p115), and to sustain their creative and productive engagement in health care. A demotivated profession cannot be expected to deliver an effective service (Reference Mcbride and MetcalfMcBride & Metcalf, 1995; Reference Appleton, House and DowellAppleton et al, 1998) and policy is not a substitute for personnel.

The problems of practitioners

Every study that has looked at the problems currently facing practitioners produces a similar long and depressing list: understaffing, poor premises, low morale, unacceptable workloads, a feeling of being dispossessed of their professional role and autonomy, violence and the fear of violence, a culture of blame, failure of management and a lack of support from colleagues (Reference Williams, Michie and PattaniWilliams et al, 1998; Ghose et al, 2000); although consultant psychiatrists work fewer hours than physicians and surgeons, they report more emotional exhaustion and depression (Reference Deary, Agius and SadlerDeary et al, 1996).

Erosion of professionalism

Successive governments have sought to limit the autonomy of professionals (Reference Fish and ColesFish & Coles, 1998), leading to ambiguity and confusion such that, among other remedies, there may be a need to reclaim a robust and contemporary awareness of what it means to be a professional, and rediscover guiding values (Reference CleverClever, 1999).

Professionalism has been defined as ‘the exercise of discretion, on behalf of another, in a situation of uncertainty’ (Reference MinzbergMinzberg, 1983), and over the past 2 decades the literature has reaffirmed that professionals deal with ‘indeterminate’ problems — ones that often lack a clear solution and are inherently complex and unpredictable. These require professionals to read the situation, to improvise and be flexible.

Blame and error

Doctors rarely speak about their mistakes with their colleagues (Reference Christensen, Levinson and DunnChristensen et al, 1992) and often see errors as failure of character (Reference Vincent, Cozens and PayneVincent, 1999). The general public is disposed to interpret clinical error as medical negligence. There is a need to reconcile idealistic aspirations, enshrined in protocols and guidelines, with the realistic portrayal of clinical practice based on judgements, for ‘clinicians are often placed in an invidious position forced to choose between options that are not ideal… even the most eminent can be tested to the utmost of their skill, and occasionally fail.’ (Reference Asthal, Scotland, Kelley and DevauxAsthal et al, 1998: p. 2). The BMA (2000: p. 9) have noted that ‘error in medicine is inevitable and extremely frequent’. Nevertheless, the fear of making mistakes weighs heavily upon practitioners.

Isolation

Doctors (and other professionals) learn to practise primarily through a process of socialisation — by holding conversations with colleagues within a community of other professionals (Reference ErautEraut, 1994; Reference Fish and ColesFish & Coles, 1998; Reference Atkinson and ClaxtonAtkinson & Claxton, 2000; Reference Davis, Little and ThorntonDavis et al, 1997; Reference Downie and MacnaughtonDownie & Macnaughton, 2000), and much learning occurs informally during the constant exchange of stories that constitutes the professional day (Reference HunterHunter, 1991). However, the progressive dispersal of consultant psychiatrists into multi-disciplinary, locality-based teams, has simultaneously been accompanied by relative isolation from their peers, apart from formal meetings to address specific agendas. Nearly 70% of consultants attending our study days on mentorship stated that they no longer have time for coffee or lunch with their colleagues owing to work pressures — times when ‘continuing professional development’ occurred naturally.

Lack of a confidant has been associated with, and enhanced risk of, anxiety and depression in health care staff (Weinberg & Creed, 2000) and psychiatrists frequently feel isolated within a mental health team, citing their relationships with peers as a source of distress. The early years in post are considered to be the most difficult (Reference Holloway, Szmukler and CarsonHolloway et al, 2000) and where opportunity for support, away from the immediate work setting, may arise by preserving special interests and links with professional networks, it would similarly be met by mentoring (SCOPME, 1999).

Mentoring

Mentoring has the joint aspiration of promoting occupational health and supporting the development of professional confidence, and has recently been identified as an appropriate practice for ‘more senior consultants’ (Department of Health, 2000a , b ) and suggested as one way of responding to the personal and professional challenges of general psychiatric practice, but little has been published on mentoring for senior doctors, or the evaluation of mentoring programmes (Reference HollowayHolloway, 2000).

Mentoring is the offer of a confidential, professional and supportive relationship, by an experienced colleague, able and willing to share his or her knowledge and experience to a protégé or mentee. This is different to the more technical processes around clinical governance, which have largely focused on increasing scrutiny and accountability. Peer supervised personal development plans (PDPs) and the processes leading to revalidation may ultimately turn out to be enabling and supportive, following the suggestion that they occur, ‘among a group of physicians who tell their stories, sharing their wisdom and compassion’ (Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2001), but there is no evidence to support its widespread introduction. Mentoring, however, offers a confidential context in which even these processes can be anticipated, and used to maximum advantage. Mentorship is therefore significantly different to PDPs, appraisal and approval, but is complementary, and supportive of them.

The south-west scheme

An awareness of the literature (above) and initial enquiry within the South and West Division of the Royal College of Psychiatrists confirmed that many newly appointed consultant psychiatrists felt isolated and experienced high levels of stress. The majority felt ill-prepared for the transition involved in taking up their consultant post.

During 1999 all established consultants (5 years in post) were contacted and asked to meet and help develop an appropriate support system. Those interested in offering themselves as mentors were asked to attend a training and development course with the steering committee. This was designed as a day of mentorship on mentorship, which facilitated self-appraisal; exploring (with others) the experience of stress in psychiatric practice; and enabled the more hesitant to value their experience and realise that they were good enough. The central aims and purposes of mentoring were clarified in discussion with the prospective mentor group (Box 1). In defining the extent of the commitment, possible pitfalls and common mistakes were discussed — boundaries, confidentiality and in particular that mentors do not aim or offer to be therapists, although they may help to arrange therapy or treatment if that is indicated.

Box 1. Aims and purposes of the mentoring relationship

  1. An opportunity for ‘mature reflection’

  2. Confidential advice

  3. Exploration of professional coping mechanisms

  4. A sounding board — someone to listen

  5. Realignment to professional realities, e.g. fallibility and uncertainty

  6. Setting priorities and managing time

  7. Induction into the consultant role

  8. Exploration of organisational culture

  9. Exploration of guiding values

  10. Sharing of experience

The induction process for mentors was designed to mirror the mentorship relationship and the concluding comments from delegates indicated considerable satisfaction with an opportunity to reflect on their professional lives in the company of experienced colleagues.

Organisation of the scheme

Newly appointed consultants are contacted by the scheme coordinator (B.M.) with a letter of welcome to their new post, and encouragement to access the scheme. Those responding are offered a choice of four mentors who have produced brief ‘pen portraits’ to enable mentees to select a colleague with an awareness of their speciality and interests. Mentees are asked to contact their chosen mentor, and to inform the scheme coordinator once arrangements have been agreed. Mentors are offered within a reasonable travelling distance, and outside their own trust, they are asked to support only one colleague, to arrange the first meeting and to encourage regular contact. The mentor's name is then removed from the list of those available. The content of the relationship is confidential but the process is reviewed and monitored by the steering committee.

The south-west group have agreed on a process beginning with an initial meeting when there is an opportunity to discuss the prospect of mentoring without commitment. This may be followed by an initial period of 6 months with the option of opting-out on both sides. A notional 2-year ‘contract’ is then offered, but it has been regarded as particularly important for the boundaries of the relationship to have a high degree of flexibility and scope for negotiation. The value of a mentoring relationship is based on a complex matching process. There are issues for and against mentoring someone previously known as a trainee, and there needs to be opportunity for an open and frank discussion concerning expectations, which are then kept under regular review. It is a relationship shaped by guidelines rather than rules. Subsequent annual review days with mentors have yielded a description of the mentoring relationship as rich, demanding and complex, and have affirmed that the iterative process of ‘returning to the beginning’ has proved to be rewarding for both parties.

The future

The unanticipated difficulty of gaining timely access to information on the whereabouts of newly appointed consultants is being overcome and a year after the scheme's inception there are 14 mentoring pairs; 58 consultants attended the recent review days. The scheme is gaining increasing endorsement from employers and managers at district and regional levels, and is expected to grow within the next year. It is anticipated that the scheme will feature in job descriptions and be incorporated into job plans, serving as an additional attraction to taking a consultant post in the south-west, and thereby offering a positive contribution to the endemic problem of recruitment and retention. Annual induction and review days for mentors will be a means of democratically shaping the development of mentoring in the south-west, and there is an emerging interest in clarifying the needs of mentors, including how best to evaluate the scheme.

Conclusions

Although consultants form a small portion of the workforce, their morale and functioning have a major effect on health care. An adequate system of support will simultaneously be in the interest of practitioners, patients and their carers, and non-medical colleagues. If appraisal and mentoring of senior doctors is only arranged when there is a perception that the doctor's performance is unacceptable, then it will be met with resistance. An alternative view is that mentorship and other supportive structures are of value to all consultants irrespective of performance, and usefully coexist with formal evaluation.

Mentorship is based on a continued emphasis on ‘the person’ of the doctor, alongside the acquisition and maintenance of knowledge and skills. It is suggested that the provision of a mentoring relationship for new consultants is only one part of a succession of facilitating relationships, which will optimally start on the first day of medical school, and continuing through the ‘seven ages of medical practice,’ mirroring the progression from undergraduate studies to active retirement.

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Figure 0

Box 1. Aims and purposes of the mentoring relationship

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